Thursday, January 31st, 2013
Full Of Fire
Video dispatches from Scandinavia and beyond, featuring The Knife
Alexa VachonPresently trying to work out this year’s vacation schedule, which if all goes according to plan will feature a return engagement to Reykjavik and Stockholm in late Summer. Which has everything and nothing to do with why I’m clearing out a number of Scandinavian-sourced videos released to the internet over the last week or so.
Beginning with the nine-minute short film that doubles as the first taste of The Knife’s new album Shaking The Habitual. I missed out the sibling duo of Karin Dreijer Andersson and Olof Dreijer circa their 2006 debut breakout effort Silent Shout – not out of ignorance, but out of fear; their creepy electronica scared me, I admit it – but have gotten over that right about in time for the April 9 release o the follow-up. And it’s just as well, because it certainly doesn’t seem like they’ve gotten any less weird or unsettling in the interim. Pitchfork has details on the new record, which is a 98-minute epic that will probably be the best-selling triple-LP since Joanna Newsom’s Have One On Me. Which wasn’t scary at all, unless harps scare you.
Video: The Knife – “Full Of Fire”
Of Monsters & Men have released another video from last year’s – or 2011’s, if you’re being pedantic – breakout debut My Head Is An Animal.
Video: Of Monsters & Men – “King and Lionheart”
Clash has a feature interview with Søen Løkke Juul of Indians, who has released a first video from his debut album Somewhere Else, officially out this week. He and his band are at The Drake Underground on March 4.
Video: Indians – “I Am Haunted”
Also out of Copenhagen – but at the other end of the musical spectrum – are Iceage, who have put out a clip from their next album You’re Nothing, in stores February 19.
Video: Iceage – “Ecstasy”
The National Post, U-T San Diego, and Seattle Weekly have interviews with Swedish electro-pop duo Niki & The Dove.
PopMatters talks to Sarah Assbring of El Perro Del Mar.
Pitchfork sums up the salient points from Sigur Rós’ Reddit AMA last week: namely that keyboardist Kjartan Sveinsson’s temporary hiatus from the band is now permanent, leaving them officially a trio, and a new “aggressive” album that’ll basically be the polar opposite of last year’s ethereal Valtari will be out later this year. They play The Air Canada Centre on March 30.
Over to the UK, Daughter have released the first video from their forthcoming debut If You Leave, out March 18 in Europe and April 30 in North America. They play The Great Hall on May 7.
Video: Daughter – “Still”
Stereogum has premiered a new video by London’s The History Of Apple Pie, taken from their just-released debut Out Of View.
Video: The History Of Apple Pie – “See You”
Pitchfork is streaming Veronica Falls’ new album Waiting For Something To Happen, out February 12. They play The Garrison on March 12.
MP3: Veronica Falls – “Teenage”
Stream: Veronica Falls / Waiting For Something To Happen
Spinner interviews Foals. Their new record Holy Fire is out February 12.
Peter Hook rebuts and escalates the war of words with his former bandmates in New Order via interviews in Billboard and MTV Hive.
Scott Hutchison of Frightened Rabbit talks to The Skinny and Drowned In Sound about their new one Pedestrian Verse, out Tuesday, and also gives the former a track-by-track walkthrough of the new record. They play The Phoenix March 31.
If you thought it weird that Billy Bragg’s previously-announced North American tour dates in support of his new record Tooth & Nail, out March 18, skipped over Toronto then you were right. It was weird. And now it’s rectified. He’ll be at The Danforth Music Hall on May 4, tickets $32.50 to $37.50. And a song from the new record is available to stream or download via his website in exchange for an email.
Stream: Billy Bragg – “Handyman Blues”
Noah & The Whale have announced a May 6 release date for their new record Heart Of Nowhere.
Billboard interviews Charli XCX, who predicts an April or May release for her debut album – just in time for her May 23 appearance at The Sound Academy supporting Marina & The Diamonds.
And back to videos, though far from Scandinavia, Tame Impala have a new clip from Lonerism. Head to Urban Outfitters for notes from the video’s director and aux.tv for an interview with bandleader Kevin Parker.
Video: Tame Impala – “Mind Mischief”
Shugo Tokumaru has gone stop-motion animation for the new video from In Focus?.
Video: Shugo Tokumaru – “Katachi”
2/4/13 8:52 am
bug says:2006 Debut Silent Shout ? That was their 3rd effort after their Self Titled debut (2001) and the amazing Deep Cuts (2003). You might actually like Deep Cuts better than Silent Shout, since it’s much less scary … and while you’re in Sweden – look up their 90:s project Honey Is Cool.
2/4/13 9:01 am
Frank Yang says:apologies for that basic failure in fact-checking. I think I’m usually better than that.